PITTSBURGH -- Three days after the Pittsburgh Penguins defeated the Washington Capitals in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Second Round, they will host Game 1 of the conference final against the Ottawa Senators.

This is the first series of the 2017 Stanley Cup Playoffs in which Ottawa has opened on the road. The Senators went 3-0 away from home against the Boston Bruins in the first round and 1-2 against the New York Rangers in the second.

Though goalie Matt Murray has recovered from a lower-body injury, Fleury is still expected to start for Pittsburgh. Through two rounds, he has arguably been the Penguins' best player with eight wins in 12 starts, a 2.55 goals-against average and .927 save percentage.

Anderson, who was also 8-4 in the first two rounds, will attempt to reverse his history against Pittsburgh. When he last faced the Penguins in the postseason, Anderson was 1-3 in five starts in the 2013 second round. He allowed six goals in each of his final two starts of that best-of-7 series, which Pittsburgh won 4-1.

3. Pittsburgh looking to build momentum

After struggling to break out of their own zone throughout most of the first two rounds, the Penguins seemed to find something in Game 7 of the second round on Wednesday. Pittsburgh stifled Washington's attack and limited the Capitals to 29 shots, most of them from the outside, in a 2-0 win that came after losses in Games 5 and 6 evened the series.

The Penguins will need to carry over what worked in Game 7 and avoid regressing to what didn't in their previous 11 playoff games if they want to win Game 1.

"We know that pretty much any series this time of year is going to be tough," forward Bryan Rust said. "We know that coming in and we're going to be just as motivated or more motivated."

4. Coping with Senators forecheck

Penguins coach Mike Sullivan spent a large portion of practice Friday preparing his players for the Senators' 1-3-1 forecheck. He used Pittsburgh's expected scratches to simulate the neutral zone-clogging system during a lengthy scrimmage.

Pittsburgh is well aware of how effective the 1-3-1 can be. If the Penguins can't find a way to solve it, the Senators could suffocate them in the neutral zone.

"We can't ease into this," Sullivan said. "We have to make sure we're ready to play from the drop of the puck."

5. Faster starts for Penguins

Pittsburgh can't afford to waste the energy from the crowd, as they have at several points during the postseason. The Penguins, who were 31-6-4 at home during the regular season, are 4-2 in the playoffs.

There have been a few exceptions, but more often than not, Pittsburgh has been outplayed early before rebounding with a surge in the final two periods during the postseason. The Penguins particularly struggled against the Capitals and mostly depended on taking advantage of scarce scoring chances. Pittsburgh can do itself a favor by coming out strong in Game 1.

Status report

Neil skated with the Senators' scratches Saturday and is unlikely to play. … Kuhnhackl is likely to be a healthy scratch for the second consecutive game.

Who's hot

Pageau has seven goals in the Stanley Cup Playoffs, with six coming against the Rangers in the second round. He is two goals behind Guentzel for the NHL lead. … Kessel has 10 points (four goals, six assists) in his past nine games. He has 13 points (five goals, eight assists) in the playoffs.